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Friday, February 21, 2014

Is democratic tyranny an oxymoron? If it were, why then did
the delegates at the American Constitutional Convention go to such pains to
carve up public or governmental power between the states and the federal
government, as well as between three “arms,” or “branches,” of the federal
government. Moreover, pitting ambition against ambition points to just how
dangerous ambition itself can be. When it is legitimated under the auspices of
democracy, democrats may have trouble coming up with justifications for
removing a democratically-elected tyrant. In this essay, I draw on the case of
Ukraine in early 2014 to suggest a few possible rationales.

Would it make a difference if the protesters were hitting other citizens rather than governmental forces? (Image Source: GlobalPost)

On February 19, 2014, violence erupted
between the police and the protesters bent on toppling the democratically-elected president. Twenty died on that day, and over seventy on the following day. While it might be
tempting to focus on “who started it,” a higher-yielding strategy goes after
the means used by the government to end the protests. Such means need not
involve violence. For example, after the second day of violence raging in Kiev, the president took part in a fruitful “all-nighter”
negotiation session with the protest leaders and E.U. officials.

To be sure, the president had an incentive to negotiate then, for his backing in the parliament was weakening. Violence rather than compromise had been his preference. Behind the scenes, the government had been paying titushki men to attack protesters whether they were being violent or not.
Heather McGill of the Europe and Central Asia Regional Program at Amnesty
International points to various reports of armed men carrying bats and other
makeshift weapons roaming around Kiev in organized groups and attacking
citizens presumed to be protesters.[1]
“(W)e have seen interviews with titushki where
they admitted they were being paid—there is definitely a body of young,
athletic men being paid by the government.”[2]
This practice obviously goes well beyond hiring people as counter-protesters,
and this distinction is vital in forming an argument founded on human rights
that can be used as a basis to re-conceptualize national sovereignty as inherently limited rather than absolute.

Specifically, in sanctioning payments to young athletic men tasked
with hurting and even killing citizens who are not being violent at the time of
attack, the Ukrainian president violated his governmental obligation to
protect the citizenry. This duty goes back to the social contract between kings
and subjects wherein the latter agreed to be ruled by the former, who in turn
obligated himself to protecting the subjects. This social contract survives in
the norm held around the world that a government is obliged to protect its
citizenry (including residents). Put another way, a government that violently
turns on its own people is typically viewed as having over-reached in a way
that violates a major postulate of its monopoly on legitimate force. When people are themselves being violent against each other or their respective
property, or are destroying public property, military or police force does
not involve such a violation of the conditions of governmental sovereignty because
protecting the citizenry includes stopping violence within the citizenry and a government acts legitimately to protect
public goods.[3]

Besides being a case of over-kill, paying thugs to wander
around Kiev (and other cities) to beat or kill citizens thought to have been in
the protests or to be protesting non-violently at the time exceeds and thus
violates a government’s legitimate use of force, which in turn comes out of the
concept of governmental sovereignty and thus national sovereignty. Such a
violation invalidates a government’s claim to the rights the sovereignty.
Crucially, this human-rights and sovereignty based argument applies to any
government official, regardless of how he
or she gained power. Hence, tyranny invalidates even a
democratically-elected government. Just as governmental and national
sovereignty are subject to limits based on the normative social contract and
the human right to life (which itself may be limited by committing violence),
democratic government also faces limits at the expense of unlimited license.

Wednesday, February 19, 2014

Even as late as 2013, as if the mounting evidence of global
warming and our carbon footprint were some new kind of faith narrative
whose white-coated high priests preside over a new political
religion distinctly American, some members of Congress, political commentators, and lay apostates recoiled with the declaration, "I don't believe in global
warming." Epistemologically, to believe is less rigorous than to know.
Actually, what they mean is that they know that our industries and carbon-emitting vehicles are blameless, even pure. It is the sheer declarativeness and the underlying epistemological assumption that I want to make transparent, as being inherently problematic and yet likely "hard-wired" in the very fabric of human brain.The entire essay is at "On the Democratization of Credibility"

How does a business model premised on abundance rather than
scarcity look? Will the budding journalistic entrepreneurs end up freely adding
to the trove of abundance subtly yet indelibly points to selective scarcity, or
will the sea of free abundance dry up once the economic need for a viable
revenue stream finally calls in the loan? If only we had infallible crystal
balls capable of showing us the future. Rather than staring into the
still-foggy abyss, let’s try breaking off pieces of the mammoth digital-media
revolution that can be answered. In this
essay, I tackle the question of whether the expansion of online journalism has
been primarily chasing the open-ended promise of the burgeoning technology, or pushing
away from increasingly decadence in the traditional media. In investigating
this question, I do not mean to imply a direct relation to the broader
question. Putting GlobalPost under
the microscope, I contend that shortcomings increasingly evident in the
traditional media have been giving the online revolution a “shot in the arm” in
the form of a transfer of talent.

Sunday, February 16, 2014

Whereas the Montreal Protocol in 1985 created a fund to
reimburse countries for the incremental costs of banning ozone-depleting
chemicals, later international agreements, such as the Kyoto Protocol, oriented
to reducing global warming have not given countries, including developing nations
such as China, a financial incentive to reduce carbon emissions. In fact, the
U.S. Government rejected the Kyoto Protocol because the reductions only applied
to developed countries. Even though China reduced its carbon emissions per unit of GNP by half from 1990 to
2010 by investing in alternative energy sources and mandating that polluting
companies publicly disclose their respective emissions, the amount of
emissions continued to increase dramatically through the period. How do we discern whether the Chinese government has done enough? Furthermore, are other countries enabling China and thus indirectly responsible and thus culpable too?

The steep rise in carbon emissions in China from 2003 demonstrate just how misleading incremental, or marginal, changes can be. Even China's goal of a 20% reduction in emissions by 2020 may not mean much in terms of the total amounts emitted.

Because CO2 is a “stock”
pollutant—meaning that global warming is a function of the total amount of
accumulated CO2 in the planet’s atmosphere (regardless of when added)—a
country’s total emissions figure is key (total accumulated as well as annual
amounts). As the following graph shows, China would have to do much more than
it had accomplished during the first decade of the twenty-first century.

By 2010, industrialized countries had become large net-importers of products such as steel whose manufacture involves sizable CO2 emissions.

Developed countries have enabled China’s emissions to the
extent that they are “contained” in products exported. The increase for China
from 1990 to 2010 (blue and red bars in the bar-graph below) is astonishing. So
too is the increase in carbon emissions “embodied” in products imported by
developed countries. Interestingly, the E.U. imported more product-emissions
than did the U.S. both in 1990 and 2010. The larger manufacturing output of the
U.S. may explain much of the difference in the respective nets. Europeans
critical of the U.S. for walking away from the Kyoto Protocol may be surprised
to learn that their country has been enabling foreign carbon-emissions more.

The thick black lines heading to China from Australia and Indonesia stand out in this map, suggesting just how much carbon China emitted in 2011.

Coal exports to China can be understood as another instance of enabling. As
global shipping costs for bulk commodities such as coal dropped significantly, the
amount of the commodity traded increased significantly. Obviously, major
exporters have a financial incentive to oppose global carbon-emissions limits
being written into multilateral treaties. In 2011, Australian companies extracted
a lot of coal, a majority of which went to China. Indeed, the sheer magnitude
of coal imported into China can tell us a lot about just how much carbon China
continued to emit in spite of the government’s forays into alternative energy
sources. Even though parts of Australia had been burned by the hole in the
ozone layer decades before 2011, the continent’s government and mining
companies have had a financial incentive to keep China from shifting to wind
and solar energy sources sufficiently even to level-off China’s annual carbon
emissions.

Had the Kyoto Protocol included carbon limits for developing countries, complete with “self-enforcing”
financial incentives (e.g., an international fund to cover incremental costs of
compliance) and disincentives (e.g., other countries in the treaty can boycott trade
with non-compliers), in spite of opposition from major coal-exporters, perhaps
China would have curtailed the upward trend in the country’s total
carbon-emissions even by 2010. Lest it
be thought that the dictatorship in China has far outpaced the world’s largest
democracy (i.e., India) as a “global citizen” enabling our species to have a
future, keeping global warming to within 2 degrees (C) will require much more
from China, and indeed the world.